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ESA ACT

HSTP: Hyperspeech Transfer Protocol - ReadWriteWeb - 0 views

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    What I love about this is how it's such a different way of looking at things..
ESA ACT

qwantz.com - dinosaur comics - February 12 2007 - 0 views

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    A bit weird but worth posting...
ESA ACT

The Whip Snowboard by Cheetah Ultra Sports | Be Sportier - 0 views

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    I want to try this!
ESA ACT

OpenID » Blog Archive » OpenID 2.0…Final(ly)! - 0 views

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    we should use this ..... for ariadna ...
ESA ACT

Nature Online Video Streaming Archive - 0 views

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    videos on scienes - easier than reading the papers...
Juxi Leitner

Rocketeers take lead in $1 million race - Cosmic Log - msnbc.com - 1 views

  • The judges will weigh all this over the next few days, in advance of an awards ceremony scheduled Thursday in Washington.
Juxi Leitner

Make: Online : Regular GPS not accurate enough? Try RTK-GPS! - 1 views

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    an open-source real time kinematic GPS receiver, allowing way better accuracy
andreiaries

Solar Sinter melts sand into 3D-printed glass (Wired UK) - 5 views

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    "When in the desert he came up with the idea to use the two dominating features in the desert -- the sun and the sand -- in his next project.". I wonder where we should send him next.
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    Arts project with implications for space science... Awesome! Note how this guy is dressed in the middle of an Egyptian desert, lol...
LeopoldS

Schneier on Security: NSA Targets the Privacy-Conscious for Surveillance - 0 views

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    ever wanted to feel an important extremist to be of interest to big brother - just google for tor :-) it was never easier to be come an "extremist" what are the consequences of this? new opportunities for secure space-based communication services?
Alexander Wittig

The Internet Archive's Windows 3.x Showcase - 4 views

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    Travel back in time and play with the original Windows 3.11. back when using a computer still meant loading EMM386 in your config.sys ;) Remember that expensive big box of hardware you were so proud of? Now the whole thing is simulated in your browser. Using JavaScript. And still runs faster. This is a collection of curated Windows 3.x software, meant to show the range of software products available for the 3.x Operating System in the early 1990s.
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    Awesome :) It's even got skifree!
benjaminroussel

The problems with forcing regular password expiry - NCSC Site - 2 views

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    Not new, but always good to read: British intelligence recommend not having password expiry dates. Something we should apply at ESA!
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    I second that. It has been an open secret for long though that frequent password changes are creating more problems than they solve. See Bruce Schneier: https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2016/08/frequent_passwo.html
Dario Izzo

Study: Jellyfish Can Sleep - The Atlantic - 1 views

shared by Dario Izzo on 23 Sep 17 - No Cached
LeopoldS liked it
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    Makes me think how little we know on sleep ....
koskons

Deep-Sea Mining and the Race to the Bottom of the Ocean - The Atlantic - 0 views

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    Interesting long read on the future of deep-sea mining
koskons

Interactive and reproducible science papers with jupyter (and mathematica)? - 6 views

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    I agree soooo very much. An increasing number of journal and scientists are finally coming on board with this open science philosophy and I bet we will soon see a radical change of the whole peer review process and publication business
Luís F. Simões

Why Is It So Hard to Predict the Future? - The Atlantic - 1 views

  • The Peculiar Blindness of Experts Credentialed authorities are comically bad at predicting the future. But reliable forecasting is possible.
  • The result: The experts were, by and large, horrific forecasters. Their areas of specialty, years of experience, and (for some) access to classified information made no difference. They were bad at short-term forecasting and bad at long-term forecasting. They were bad at forecasting in every domain. When experts declared that future events were impossible or nearly impossible, 15 percent of them occurred nonetheless. When they declared events to be a sure thing, more than one-quarter of them failed to transpire. As the Danish proverb warns, “It is difficult to make predictions, especially about the future.”
  • Tetlock and Mellers found that not only were the best forecasters foxy as individuals, but they tended to have qualities that made them particularly effective collaborators. They were “curious about, well, really everything,” as one of the top forecasters told me. They crossed disciplines, and viewed their teammates as sources for learning, rather than peers to be convinced. When those foxes were later grouped into much smaller teams—12 members each—they became even more accurate. They outperformed—by a lot—a group of experienced intelligence analysts with access to classified data.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • This article is adapted from David Epstein’s book Range: Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World.
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